CREDIT LIMITS UNDER THE VALUN SYSTEM
1943
The essence of credit under a true monetary system is not
a promise to pay money but a promise to receive money.
The crux of the valun proposal lies in the determination of the
limit to be placed on each individual's money issuing power. The
stability of the valun and, therefore, the viability of the entire
valun system, rests upon finding this limit. If we are to create
a working monetary unit to replace the inherently unsound politically
based monetary units now in existence, we must be assured that
inflationary instability is not implicit in the structure of the
valun system at its inception. To do this we must examine how
real value is created, and how the exchange process assists society
in realizing the maximum gain from this created value.
Monetary exchange is indispensable to all of us because we are
interdependent. We are interdependent because we have discovered
that we can exploit ourselves fully only through others. If we
were each only able to consume that which we individually produced,
we would have a low standard of living indeed. In other words,
we as individuals cannot make everything we would like to have.
If, on the other hand, we exchange our output for the output of
others, our standard of living is limited only by our ability
and by the efficiency of the exchange process.
To date, the most efficient methods of exchange that have been
devised utilize money. There is nothing sacred, however, about
money or the monetary system on which it is founded. A monetary
system is not an end in itself; it is a means to an end. It is
a device for facilitating exchange and, hence, a means of exploiting
our own wealth-producing capacity.
Each of us is but a very small part of the vast mechanism of
production. Many of us apply our minds and hands directly to none
of the things that we use or consume. Yet all we acquire is, indirectly,
of our own making. Regrettably, most of us have made more than
we have acquired. Our unfair political monetary system, through
its distortion of the process of exchange, has allowed others
to appropriate some of our production.
Ideally we make all we consume and consume all we make, however
indirect the process may be. It follows that each of us is his
own customer and that a true exchange system is one that permits
us to buy from ourselves everything we produce and nothing more.
If I am a shoemaker and desire an automobile, then when I have
made an adequate number of shoes, I should come into possession
of the automobile that I desire. The transformation of the shoes
into an automobile is the service that exchange renders me. Similarly,
the transformation of the automobile into shoes and other things
is the way exchange serves the automotive worker. The function
of exchange is to transform our production into the things that
we want.
If exchange plays no tricks on us, we are really all working
for ourselves; we are all buying from ourselves; we are all selling
to ourselves. But just what is it that we are buying and selling?
In the final analysis, it is simply human energy, mental and physical.
Infinite varieties of human energy have appeared in physical form
to be exchanged in the market place, but, basically, there is
only one commodity exchanged, and that is human effort. Labor
is the basic or virgin commodity. It has no quality of obsolescence,
for it is always associated with the latest and therefore the
most timely products. It is the only value.
Others have comprehended this, and from this premise, that all
value is labor, and additionally from the premise that money is
based on value, they have reached the conclusion that money must
be based on labor—and rightly so. The fatal error that labor
money planners have made is that they set a measure of labor,
such as an hour, as a unit of value. While it is true that labor,
both physical and mental, is the only value, and therefore the
sole commodity that passes through exchange, it does not follow
that all labor is equally valuable. Indeed, labor may be so unintelligently
applied that it is completely worthless.
We are all laborers and, therefore, fountains of wealth, because
we all emit human energy. We must, however, direct that energy
to meet the demands of our fellow laborers. By the measure to
which we respond to this demand, will our energy be valued. It
will not be by the hours we have spent projecting our energy,
nor by the sweat and toil we have put forth. In turn, our fellow
exchange participants must use their energy to our liking. The
process of evaluating this released energy is the function of
exchange, and, after evaluation has been completed, money can
be used to express this evaluation. But money itself, if it is
to be of maximum utility, should have no influence whatever in
determining values. Money is not a measure of value, it is a method
of stating a value that has already been determined by exchange.
To be of maximum utility, money must be available to all who
wish to increase the value of their output, but who can only do
so through an investment of capital. Traditional banking credit
practice is based on the idea that the creditworthiness of the
individual (or entity) seeking to establish a line of credit derives
from that individual's possession of material resources. This
is an outgrowth of old aristocratic attitudes by which an individual
was judged by his social status rather than by his ability. To
be sure, this idea of creditworthiness that exists in the banker's
mind is reinforced by the shortcomings of the politically based
monetary system which force him into a conservative posture. Nevertheless,
the whole attitude is basically one that has been inherited and
to which our minds have become habituated. We must take care that
we do not borrow this counterproductive mental habit in the construction
of the valun system.
The ideal that we must strive for is to keep money neutral in
all aspects of the exchange process. To do this, we must, among
other things, make the money creating process available to anyone
who wishes to utilize it. There are, of course, certain limits
which must be observed, and these bounds will not be easy to determine.
The best principle can, however, be simply stated thus: Each person
or corporation is entitled to create as much money, by buying,
as he or it is able to redeem by selling.
Each of us, as noted, is basically his own supplier and his own
customer. The exchange process is, in fact, a shuttle movement.
The shuttle goes from us laden with our energy and returns this
energy to us transformed into the energy of others. Or it comes
to us first, and then we return it. In either case, the movement
is initiated by money power, and whoever lacks money power is
unable to start the shuttle. An economy that restricts its shuttle
starters limits its productivity. The power to start the shuttle
is really the power to buy from one's self, i.e. the power to
create demand for one's own services. A true monetary system must
make this power available to all.
While the power to buy induces demand to sell, it does not follow
that this reciprocal transaction invariably reacts on a particular
buyer, for he may not have the particular value for which a demand
has been created. Therefore, we cannot solve the economic problem
by merely providing money power and multiplying shuttle-starters.
If the problem were as simple as that, we could establish the
money creating power for everyone without limit, on the assumption
that selling would automatically balance buying in each case.
Buying does create demand that reacts on some seller, but not
necessarily on the one who created the demand. There is, however,
no way of determining in advance whether a particular buyer may
create a demand for his own wares or services. Since this is so,
it is obvious that exchange can operate only on a trial and error
basis. The problem we must solve is how large a margin of error
can be allowed to each member of the valun exchange without the
cumulative errors of all members being large enough to introduce
instability.
The best that we can do is to set up a policy subject to amendment
as experience may dictate. Although it is possible that we may
underestimate the effect of errors, this should not intimidate
us, because greater harm can follow from being too conservative.
Creative and productive effort must not be impeded by a lack of
adequate financing, even though some banks fail to realize the
ideal of a full redemption of credits allowed. It is better to
allot too much money power than too little.
The normal experience of business is that income and outgo keep
approximately abreast of each other, so that our purpose is merely
to provide a margin of working capital. In some industries, due
to differences in lengths of turnover, the margin required is
larger than in others. Some industries, particularly the farming
industry, have net deficits for a long period before returns come
in. Others, the retail grocery business, for example, has a lag
of only one or two weeks between outgo and income.
A study of the turnover of various industries should be made
as a guide for establishing general rules. As a suggestion for
the initiation of trading in valuns, the following might be considered:
Each employer would maintain with his bank a list of the names
of employees, together with the amount of salary payable to each
over a three-months period. This amount would then constitute
the debit limit for each such individual. Each would then be authorized
to write checks until the stated limit was reached. The amount
of the stipulated salary would be credited to the account of the
employee as earned, and would be simultaneously debited to the
employer's payroll accounts. Checks written by employees would
be debited to their accounts. No further payroll process would
be necessary. Thus the money-creating process would begin with
employees writing checks to cover their needs. If an employee
had a salary of 100 valuns per month, his debit limit would be
300 valuns, and he would be entitled to overdraw his checking
account by anything up to 300 valuns.
The employer would have two checking accounts, a payroll account
and a commercial account. His payroll account would have a debit
limit equal to his total payroll for three months. His commercial
account would have a debit limit as determined by the class of
his industry and his gross sales.
A monetary circle cannot begin until some buyers create money
through debits or overdrafts. Therefore, the most essential provision
of a monetary system is a debit policy that permits members to
draw against a debit in adequate amount to create circulation.
To assure that all valun account holders have the necessary debit
power, a minimum of, say, a hundred valuns might be provided for
every account holder not drawing a salary. These debit limits
would not be loans. No instruments would be executed for them,
and the actual debit would be the amount of overdraft that had
been drawn on the account. There would be no term to these overdrafts,
and they might be maintained indefinitely. The reason for this
is that they would constitute the money supply and would be necessary
to exchange.
Debit balances on some accounts, of course, imply credit balances
on others. Therefore, it would be impossible for all members to
have debit balances at the same time. Some might start their check
writing against a credit balance and never have a debit balance,
while others might remain chronically on the debit side.
Under the above proposal, exchange would begin by consumers purchasing
at retail and by employers purchasing at wholesale. At the end
of the initial three-months period, the employer would find himself
with a debit to his payroll account equal to the total earnings
of his employees during that period. This would be the limit of
the payroll account. For his employees to continue their drafts,
he would have to draw on his commercial account—into which
would have been deposited all of his receipts.
Each account holder, with his debit limit assigned, could then,
within such limit, create fountain-pen money by the mere writing
of checks. If he should exceed his debit or over-draft limit,
his check would be returned just as it now is when he exhausts
his credit balance at the bank.
There would be no payroll problem for either employer or employee.
The bank would automatically credit the prescribed pay to each
employee's account each payday, and the employee would enter his
pay in his checkbook.
Under this plan of employee money-creating power, employment
is given a stimulus, because each employee brings to his employer
his own debit power, and the employer has a three-months deferment
of wage payments. This is a vital contribution toward the sale
of labor services, because it makes the payroll less forbidding.
Each employee becomes a capitalist who brings not only his services,
but his own financing.
Once we have established the principle of debit power for all
we have released a power for economic stability that does not
exist when this power is restricted to certain "creditworthy"
individuals. The full benefits of the democratization of the money
creating power cannot be forecast, but it is plain that this power
could positively prevent depression.
When goods show a tendency to accumulate in warehouses, it indicates
that employees have not received wages high enough to purchase
the goods they have produced. Reduced production, which means
reduced employment, ensues, and this, in turn, implies further
reduction in purchasing. Thus the imbalance between goods supply
and money supply is accentuated. Perfect competition would, of
course, preclude this imbalance between goods supply and money
supply, because it would compel adequate wages. But can we hope
for perfect competition?
Should there be no other recourse than to introduce a compensatory
force to balance the inequities of imperfect competition, the
valun system would be found to provide such a force. By the simple
measure of continuing the debit power for a discharged employee,
the depression spiral would be prevented from forming.
During a period of widespread unemployment, consumption would
be able to continue while production would be retarded, thus tending
to restore the balance between production and consumption. The
employee, in effect, would buy himself back into employment, because
his consumption would induce demand for production, just as his
previously stinted consumption had brought about his unemployment.
A depression means shortage of employers and surplus of employees.
Is it not made less menacing when the money creating power resides
on the employee side of the employment line as well as on the
employer's side? Since unemployment would no longer mean an immediate
drain upon available funds, some employees would be induced to
step across the line and become employers, and thus help restore
the balance between employers and employees.
The aim of the valun proposal is to establish a true monetary
system and to rely on competition to keep the economy on a steady
keel. It is not inspired by the notion of establishing a compensatory
system for inequities that might exist in the current system of
exchange. It should be noted, however, that if a compensatory
program were desired, the valun system could effectively provide
the basis for such a program.
Since constant employment, with concomitant constant production
and constant consumption, is the economic ideal, we should regard
the employer-employee relationship as existing between the whole
body of employers and the whole body of employees, rather than
between individual employers and individual employees. If we do
this, valun banks will, of necessity, provide central employment
bureaus where employee-account holders are registered. Full information
as to their qualifications would, of course, be available to prospective
employers. Should any account holder be laid off, he could continue
to draw on his account while, at the same time, receiving maximum
assistance in locating other employment.
If there are advantages to the valun system's open credit policy,
there are also disadvantages. One of these that might loom large
in the minds of some people is the possibility of moral delinquency.
Yet nothing is expected of anyone who issues valuns through his
debit power other than that he will do just what he is in business
to do in any case, namely, accept valuns, when tendered, for the
goods or services that he sells. If he fails in this, it will
soon show up on his account. If he has been willing to deliver
his wares or work at competitive prices and has found no takers,
the fault is not moral. If he willfully refuses to accept employment
or patronage to discharge his debts, he automatically brings upon
himself ostracism from the entire valun community. This self-imposed
injury is much greater than any harm that will accrue to the remaining,
reputable membership, which, after all, will go on functioning
without even noticing his departure.
There will be honest failures, since men will continue to be
fallible, and the system should provide some way of reestablishing
the debit power of such persons. But this is one of the matters
that may be left to the common sense of the members to decide.
The question of what becomes of unsatisfied debits that result
from failures is not one that is peculiar to the valun system.
Losses in business are absorbed in the price of goods, and this
is one of the influences that tend to raise prices. Another such
influence is the presence of private counterfeits. On the other
hand, there are also factors that tend to reduce prices, notably
the loss of currency through various causes. None of these factors
are serious, and for the purposes of this study may be ignored.
We may assume that every issuer of valuns would redeem with goods
and services all the valuns he issued. The failure, for whatever
reason, to do so could not be as harmful to the economy as a pessimistic
credit policy, which would hamper exchange. It is far better that
more money be issued than is redeemed, than that too little be
issued. Too little hampers exchange, and this in turn retards
the production of wealth. Idle man hours are a more serious loss
than unredeemed money and must never be hazarded by overzealously
guarding against credit losses. Interrupted production is the
only loss that is a net loss.
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